Lime
#32CD32
Navy
#001F5B
Lime & Navy
Lime and Navy Color Combination — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ComplementaryLime and Navy Color Meaning
Lime and navy creates the Lacoste tennis sports-club tradition combination — because Lacoste (Lacoste S.A., 8 rue de Castiglione, Paris 75001, France — the most internationally recognized single tennis heritage brand in the world, founded 1933 by René Lacoste / 'Le Crocodile' — the most specifically French-Open-tennis and the most broadly globally-sports-club-recognized single brand in the history of tennis apparel, with the Lacoste green/lime piqué polo shirt being the most specifically Lacoste-branded and the most broadly globally-recognized single tennis sports-apparel warm in the history of French sports couture) uses the combination of the lime-green / vert Lacoste of the Lacoste piqué polo shirt (the most specifically Lacoste-branded-lime-green and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-sports-polo warm — the original Lacoste polo developed by René Lacoste and André Gillier in 1933, the most specifically tennis-sports-polo and the most broadly globally-sports-club-commercially-recognized single polo shirt warm, sold in 80+ countries with approximately 60 million items annually) and the navy blue of the classic Lacoste navy polo and the Roland-Garros-club-navy tradition (the most specifically Lacoste-polo-navy and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Paris-tennis-club cool) as the most specifically Lacoste-sports-club and the most broadly globally-tennis-recognized warm-cool.
The Roland-Garros / French Open tradition (Roland Garros, 2 Avenue Gordon Bennett, Paris 16ème — the most prestigious clay-court Grand Slam in tennis, the most specifically French-Open and the most broadly globally-tennis-recognized single Grand Slam clay-court tournament, where the clay-orange court and the Lacoste sports-club lime-and-navy tradition have been interwoven since the 1920s–1930s — the Roland-Garros clay and the Lacoste brand the most specifically Parisian-tennis-heritage and the most broadly globally-Grand-Slam-recognized warm-cool) creates the lime-and-navy warm-cool at the most specifically Roland-Garros-Grand-Slam-clay and the most broadly globally-tennis-recognized warm-cool scale.
The Ivy League American prep tradition (the Ivy League, the 8 American universities founded as the Colonial Colleges — Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Brown, Dartmouth, Pennsylvania, and Cornell — featuring the most specifically American-prep-sports-club and the most broadly internationally-American-collegiate-recognized lime-and-navy as the most specifically Lacoste-Ivy-League-sports-club and the most precisely American-preppy-Ralph-Lauren-style warm-cool) creates the lime-and-navy warm-cool at the most specifically Ivy-League-American-collegiate and the most broadly internationally-American-prep warm-cool scale.
Lime and Navy in Design
Lime and navy in design creates the most specifically Lacoste tennis sports-club and the most Roland-Garros-Grand-Slam-Parisian-heritage warm-cool — Lacoste 60-million-items-annually 80-countries most-internationally-recognized-tennis-heritage-brand, Roland Garros most-prestigious-clay-court-Grand-Slam, Ivy League most-specifically-American-collegiate-prep. For Lacoste heritage, Roland Garros tennis organizations, and any design context where the most specifically Lacoste-sports-club and the most precisely Parisian-tennis-heritage warm-cool is needed, this creates the most precisely calibrated and the most Lacoste-tennis-authentic warm-cool identity.
The combination's Lacoste sports-club authority (Lacoste-lime-polo's most-specifically-Chemise-Lacoste-branded warm against Roland-Garros-navy's most-precisely-Parisian-tennis-club creates the most specifically Lacoste-sports-club and the most broadly globally-tennis-recognized warm-cool — 60 million items annually, 80 countries, the most specifically Chemise-Lacoste-branded and the most broadly globally-sports-club-commercially-recognized single polo warm-cool in the history of French sports couture) gives it an unusual Lacoste-tennis-sports-club global authority.
In contemporary Lacoste S.A. heritage brand design, Roland Garros Grand Slam heritage, and American Ivy League prep tradition, the lime-and-navy combination creates the most specifically Lacoste-tennis-sports-club and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Parisian warm-cool identity.
Lime and Navy Color Style
Lime and navy define the visual character of the Lacoste piqué polo and the Roland-Garros Paris tennis club — the vivid lime-green of the Lacoste Chemise-Lacoste piqué polo and the most specifically Lacoste-branded-sports-polo warm against the deep navy of the Roland-Garros sports-club navy, the Ivy League American-prep navy. Lacoste-Chemise-Lacoste vivid-lime piqué-polo against Roland-Garros-Paris classic navy.
The mood is of Lacoste Paris tennis-club warmth — the specific quality of the Roland-Garros clay-court and the Lacoste sports-club summer at the Stade Roland Garros, where the vivid lime-green of the Lacoste piqué polo and the deep navy of the classic sports-club create the most specifically Lacoste-Parisian-tennis-heritage and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Grand-Slam warm-cool. Lime and navy is the palette of the most specifically Lacoste-60-million-annually and the most Roland-Garros-Parisian-Grand-Slam-clay warm-cool.
Contemporary applications include Lacoste S.A. Paris heritage brand, Roland Garros French Open, Ivy League American collegiate prep, and any brand wanting the most specifically Lacoste-tennis-sports-club and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Parisian warm-cool combination.
What Lime and Navy Mean Together
Chemise Lacoste original (Lacoste S.A., 8 rue de Castiglione, Paris 75001 — the most specifically Lacoste-officially-branded and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-sports-polo-authenticated heritage, the vivid lime-green Lacoste piqué polo first created in 1933 by René Lacoste and André Gillier for the 1933 Davis Cup — the most specifically French-Davis-Cup-tennis-historically and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-1933-designed warm-cool in the history of French sports couture) — creates the lime-and-navy warm-cool at the most specifically Chemise-Lacoste-1933-Davis-Cup-historically and the most precisely Lacoste-officially-branded warm-cool scale.
Roland Garros (Stade Roland Garros, 2 Avenue Gordon Bennett, Paris 75016 — the most prestigious clay-court Grand Slam tennis tournament in the world, the French Open, first held 1891, featuring approximately 500,000 spectators annually and the most specifically Paris-tennis-heritage and the most broadly globally-Grand-Slam-clay-recognized warm-cool with Lacoste lime-and-navy as the most specifically French-tennis-heritage warm-cool at the most globally prestigious clay-court tennis venue) — creates the lime-and-navy warm-cool at the most specifically Roland-Garros-Paris-Grand-Slam-clay and the most broadly globally-tennis-Grand-Slam warm-cool scale.
The Lacoste 'Le Crocodile' brand heritage (René Lacoste, 'Le Crocodile', 1904–1996, seven Grand Slam singles titles, the most specifically Lacoste-personally-branded and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-crocodile-historically-authenticated warm-cool — including the famous 1926 Longwood Cricket Club Boston photograph of René Lacoste wearing the first prototype Lacoste polo that established the Lacoste lime-and-navy tennis-club identity at the most historically specific moment in sports apparel history) — creates the lime-and-navy warm-cool at the most specifically René-Lacoste-1926-Boston-historically and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-crocodile warm-cool scale.
Lime and Navy in Branding
Lime and navy branding projects Lacoste Paris tennis-club authority and Roland Garros Grand Slam heritage — Lacoste 60-million-items-annually 80-countries most-internationally-recognized-tennis-heritage-brand, Roland Garros most-prestigious-clay-court-Grand-Slam 500,000-spectators, Ivy League 8-Colonial-Colleges most-specifically-American-collegiate-prep. Lacoste heritage and tennis-club brands and any organization wanting the most specifically Lacoste-tennis-sports-club and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Parisian warm-cool benefits from this extraordinary Lacoste-Roland-Garros-Ivy-League triple tennis authority.
The combination's Lacoste sports-club authority (Lacoste-lime-green-piqué + Roland-Garros-navy = the most specifically Chemise-Lacoste-branded and the most broadly globally-tennis-recognized warm-cool — 60 million items annually, 80 countries, the most specifically 1933-René-Lacoste-Davis-Cup-designed and the most broadly globally-sports-club-commercially-recognized single warm-cool in the history of French sports couture) creates brand identity with extraordinary Lacoste tennis-club global authority.
Brands
Industries
Lime and Navy in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, lime and navy creates the most specifically Lacoste Chemise-Lacoste tennis-sports-club and the most Roland-Garros-Parisian warm-cool wardrobe — the combination of Chemise-Lacoste-piqué vivid lime and Roland-Garros-sports-club navy creates the dressing of the most specifically Lacoste-branded-tennis and the most precisely Parisian-tennis-club warm-cool: the Lacoste-lime piqué polo with Roland-Garros navy accents, the classic navy dress with Lacoste-lime-crocodile detail. This is the Lacoste Paris tennis-club wardrobe — Chemise-Lacoste piqué lime against Roland-Garros classic navy.
Interior design with lime and navy creates the most specifically Lacoste tennis-club and the most Roland-Garros-Parisian domestic environment — lime in Lacoste-piqué-polo-inspired vivid-lime sports-club accent elements, Chemise-Lacoste-branded lime surfaces, and Lacoste-tennis-club vivid-lime warm accents against navy in Roland-Garros-sports-club-inspired deep navy surfaces, Ivy-League-collegiate-navy architectural elements, and the most specifically Lacoste-polo-navy classic elements creates the most specifically Lacoste-Paris-tennis-club and the most Roland-Garros-Parisian interior.
In the Lacoste S.A., Roland Garros French Open, and Ivy League American prep heritage brand tradition, the lime-and-navy combination creates the most specifically Lacoste-tennis-sports-club and the most precisely Roland-Garros-Parisian warm-cool.
Lime and Navy — Each Color Separately
Lime
#32CD32
Lime — the Lacoste tennis court lime. The most specifically Lacoste-crocodile-piqué and the most precisely Chemise-Lacoste-sports-green warm.
Explore Lime →Navy
#001F5B
Navy — the Lacoste classic navy polo. The most specifically Lacoste-polo-navy and the most precisely Roland-Garros-sports-club cool.
Explore Navy →Lime and Navy — FAQ
- Do lime and navy go together?
- Yes — lime and navy create the Lacoste tennis sports-club combination: Lacoste S.A. (8 rue de Castiglione, Paris, founded 1933 by René Lacoste 'Le Crocodile', 60 million items annually, 80+ countries, the most internationally recognized tennis heritage brand) uses vivid lime-green as its core polo identity with deep navy as the classic sports-club complement. Roland Garros (2 Avenue Gordon Bennett, Paris 75016, 500,000 annual spectators) is the most prestigious clay-court Grand Slam — the most Parisian-tennis lime-and-navy tradition.
- What does lime and navy mean?
- Lime and navy together mean Lacoste Paris tennis-club authority — Lacoste 60-million-items 80-countries most-internationally-recognized-tennis-heritage-brand, Roland Garros most-prestigious-clay-court-Grand-Slam, Ivy League most-specifically-American-collegiate-prep, and the general meaning of Chemise-Lacoste vivid lime (the most specifically 1933-René-Lacoste-Davis-Cup-branded warm) against Roland-Garros-sports-club deep navy (the most specifically Parisian-tennis-club and the most precisely classic-sports-club cool) in the most specifically Lacoste-tennis-sports-club warm-cool.
- How does lime and navy compare to green and navy?
- Lime (#32CD32) is vivid bright-green, more specifically Lacoste-Chemise-branded sports-polo — tennis-club, Paris sports couture, Roland-Garros. Green (#008000) is deeper mid-green, more specifically Ralph Lauren Polo America — Ivy League collegiate, American prep, New England. Lime-and-navy is the Lacoste Paris tennis-sports-club (vivid polo, French-sports-couture specifically, Roland-Garros Grand Slam); green-and-navy is the Ralph Lauren Polo Ivy League American prep (deeper mid-green, American collegiate specifically, New England). Lime is the Chemise Lacoste; green is the Ralph Lauren Polo.
- What accent colors work with lime and navy?
- White adds the most specifically Lacoste-polo classic purity. Gold adds the most specifically Roland-Garros Coupe des Mousquetaires trophy metallic. Pale sky blue adds the most specifically Parisian-sky complement. Red adds the most specifically Davis-Cup-France sports-competitive energy. Cream adds the most naturally Lacoste-Paris-domestic warmth. Deep charcoal adds the most dramatically sports-club authority. Most powerful in the Lacoste-tennis-sports-club vocabulary: Chemise-Lacoste piqué lime, Roland-Garros navy, Lacoste-polo white, Roland-Garros-Mousquetaires gold, and the specific most-Lacoste-60-million-annually-globally-commercially and the most specifically 1933-René-Lacoste-Davis-Cup-designed warm-cool of the most internationally recognized single tennis heritage brand.